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    Home»Business»What it actually takes to future-proof your organization
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    What it actually takes to future-proof your organization

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteJune 29, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Over the past decade, I’ve watched leaders chase digital transformation like it was the only game in town. Faster systems, leaner processes, and smarter automation have been the goals. And yet, the organizations that are genuinely thriving in the “Imagination Era”—this moment defined by AI, volatility, and the premium on creative thinking—aren’t winning on technology alone. They’re winning on people. The question is: Do they actually know why?

    I recently spoke with Angela Jackson, Harvard University lecturer, founder of Future Forward Strategies, and author of The Win-Win Workplace, whose research across more than 1,700 companies offers a data-backed answer. Her most striking finding? Most organizations still can’t measure what makes their people uniquely valuable—and that blind spot is becoming catastrophically expensive.

    “If you don’t understand how humans are uniquely adding value, it’s really difficult to optimize for that,” said Jackson, who has a doctorate in education leadership from Harvard. She puts it in the sharpest possible terms: As companies race to deploy AI agents—some imagine one human managing 15 of them—the urgent question becomes what that one human needs to be genuinely good at. And most organizations haven’t done that audit.

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    Sentient intelligence

    Jackson’s answer surprises leaders who expect a list of technical competencies. The capability she sees as most irreplaceable is relational systems intelligence, which is the ability to understand your own expertise relative to the broader ecosystem of colleagues, processes, and gaps around you. “Unless you’ve worked in an environment and deeply understand how the work gets done—not just your individual contribution, but as an ecosystem—it’s really difficult to replicate that,” she said.
    This is what I call sentient intelligence: the distinctly human capacity for contextual awareness, embodied judgment, and relational knowing that no algorithm can replicate. For example, Jackson pointed to something that artificial intelligence still cannot do in real time: read the room. Knowing that Jim’s expression in a sales meeting signals skepticism, and pivoting accordingly, is sentient intelligence in action: a capability that belongs to the human in the loop, not the agent.

    The same logic applies to strategy. Jackson’s research shows that the billion-dollar employee listening industry has a fundamental execution problem: Workers are asked for input constantly and rarely see it acted upon. What’s changing now is the ability to use AI itself to process frontline intelligence at scale and operationalize it into strategy in real time. Think of a bank teller who notices a pattern in customer complaints weeks before it surfaces in the C-suite. “Those tidbits of conversations matter,” Jackson said. The companies getting this right aren’t just listening; they’re asking the more courageous question: “What have we missed?”

    Capability not pedigree

    This is where skills-based hiring enters the conversation and where Jackson’s research lands its most actionable punch. Degrees, she argues, are a proxy for capability, not a proof of it. They measure seat time, not aptitude for doing. Organizations that have shifted to skills-based hiring are seeing talent costs drop, retention rates rise by 30% to 40%, and a widened aperture for talent that allows smaller companies to compete with giants. The future-ready organization isn’t filtering for pedigree; it’s filtering for demonstrated capability and learning agility.

    But here’s what separates organizations that understand all of this from those that execute on it: leadership belief. Jackson calls the leaders driving these results the “Coalition of the Willing”—those who hold a fundamental conviction that people can learn, grow, and rise. This is my principle of “inside-out leadership” in practice. It isn’t a management technique. It’s a worldview. And it determines whether a leader invests time in people—the highest-leverage strategy in Jackson’s research—or simply pays the concept lip service.

    Getting future-ready in an age of AI isn’t a technology problem. It’s a clarity problem. Get clear on what’s uniquely human in your organization. What’s the sentient intelligence your people bring to work every day? Get crisp about the skills that actually matter for each role. And ask yourself honestly: Do I believe my people can grow? The leaders who can say yes and mean it are already building the only competitive advantage that can’t be automated.

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